What would you do if I
sang out of tune,
Would you stand up and walk out on me?
Lend me your ears and I'll sing you a song
And I'll try not to sing out of key...
-- Joe Cocker, A Little Help From My Friends

IN BRIEF

-
George Bush and Ben Bernanke gave a
helping hand to the market last week with their accommodative talk.
Lucky perhaps, but also part of the expected market script.

-
Gold is back in
positive mode once again, as the light bulb goes on for investors and
traders as to what is most likely ahead.

-
The remarkable thing about the run in energy
stocks, in tandem with the rise of crude oil, was the way $70 a
barrel oil seemed to put no meaningful damper on demand. We're still
seeing that combo work its magic...

-
Tech stocks are the new black in a sea of
subprime red. While the rest of the country frets, Silicon Valley dreams
of "Web 2.0" profits...

-
Countrywide Financial still has potential
to be a "damsel in distress." While one white knight has
already stumbled, another, bigger one could be waiting in the wings...

-
EWH, the Hong Kong iShares ETF, has gone
on to new heights even as many of its peers lag far below previous
highs...

-
The Market Vectors Steel ETF reminds us
that the global boom may yet survive, and not get knuckled under by subprime...

-
As soybean futures follow wheat futures
higher, it seems clear Wall Street is still oblivious to the perfect
storm brewing for grains.

IN THE MIDDLE OF LAST WEEK
or so, the Consilient trading portfolio added three new long trades --
the Energy Select SPDR (XLE:amex), the Pro Shares Ultra QQQ ETF (QLD:amex),
and the StreetTracks gold ETF (GLD:nyse).

Things were looking hairy at first, but
soon turned around quite nicely... thanks to a little help from our
friends, George Bush and Ben Bernanke. The President and the Fed Chief
sang an accommodative tune, hinting loudly at rate cut possibilities and
distressed homeowner largesse.

The rapid turnaround might be classified
as a bit of luck (which every wise trader welcomes). And yet, an
indulgent helping hand has always been a part of our market script. When
Macro Musingspounded
the table for gold stocks a few weeks ago, a key piece of the
argument was the return of stimulative, i.e. inflationary, monetary
policy with a clear "rescue" bias.

As with all our trades, these three had
reasons technical and fundamental behind them; it's just harder
to be chronologically precise on the fundamental side. Kudos to George
and Ben for their timing.

GOLD IS BACK in
positive mode once again, as the light bulb goes on for investors and
traders as to what is most likely ahead.

A combination of stimulative monetary
policy and accommodative (read: not horrible) corporate profits is a
recipe for ongoing inflation creep and a continued trend of paper asset
inflation. Except now, with a good bit of hot air sucked out of the
financials, there is more room for safe haven niches and inflationary
plays, as efforts to bail out Joe Homeowner wind up helping Joe
Goldowner by accident.

ENERGY STOCKS, as
we have mentioned more than once, have been a major market driver these
past few years. Escalating crude oil prices allowed energy companies --
oil majors, refiners, drillers, service companies and the like -- to
reap eye-popping profits. (And even now those profits do not seem to be
fully discounted by the street.)

The remarkable thing about energy stocks'
run, in tandem with the rise of crude oil, was the way $70 a barrel oil
seemed to put no meaningful damper on demand. We are still seeing that
combo work its magic as crude makes its way into the mid $70s once
again. Energy stocks can arguably be seen as an inflation hedge, a
global growth play, and a peak oil play all at once.

TECH STOCKS ARE THE NEW BLACK in
a sea of subprime red.

While the rest of the country frets over
mortgage meltdowns and credit downgrades, the Silicon Valley boys and
girls are dreaming of all the profits to be made from "Web
2.0."

Private companies like Facebook dream of
going public and becoming the next Google; gadgets like the iPhone have
the world clamoring for endless consumer bandwidth; and hardware
companies like Cisco are hitting 52-week highs on the prospect of
selling all the internet plumbing required to make "web 2.0"
possible.

EMERGING MARKETS have
taken a nasty beating and bounced back smartly since. As noted in a
previous Tactical View, the chart patterns have looked similar
across the board. While looking much better on the whole, few emerging
market ETFs have surpassed their previous highs.

One exception is EWH, the Hong Kong
iShares ETF, which has gone on to new heights even as most others have
lagged. Top holdings of EWH include Asian stalwarts like Hutchison
Whampoa, Cheung Kong holdings, and Sun Hung Kai Properties.

Many pundits have pooh-poohed Asian
equities as a place to take shelter, but they haven't been a bad place
to hang out so far...

COUNTRYWIDE FINANCIAL still
has potential to be a "damsel in distress"... a
tongue-in-cheek term we deployed in an essay on the great investment
fortunes, Fortune
Building 101.

Unfortunately for current Countrywide
shareholders, one white knight has already been rebuffed. Bank of
America heroically threw $2 billion at the bleeding mortgage lender,
expecting its vote of confidence to be rewarded with a sustainably
higher share price.

No such luck...Wall Street is still
worried about the darker corners of Countrywide's books, not to mention
its ability to weather further damage if the credit storm intensifies.
But if things get much uglier for CFC, the original damsel-rescuer may
yet step in.

Given CFC's size and general reputation
(tarnished subprime activities aside), the company's woes bear at least
passing resemblance to the "salad oil scandal" that hit
American Express in the 1960s, after which Warren Buffett purchased a
gigantic block of Amex stock at severely depressed prices.

Mr. Buffett, who currently sits on $50
billion in cash, has said he can "spend money faster than Imelda
Marcos" when the opportunity is right. Presumably he isn't talking
a closet full of shoes... and isn't the only distressed buyer watching
the markets with a keen eye.

THE JAPANESE YEN has
been unleashed. After a long stretch of sleepy movement, volatility is
now the order of the day. The Yen exploded as credit markets imploded;
as credit fears take a breather, so does the carry trade bottle-rocket.

Large and small speculators are now net
long CME Yen futures, the latest Commitment of Traders report indicates.
But the $64 trillion yen question is, whither the Japanese public?
"Mrs. Watanabe," the Japanese reincarnation of the American
day trader circa 1999, is still presumably betting hard against her own
currency.

When the Japanese public start calling in
their global forex bets, we could see the yen go into its next stage of
orbit.

Steel is a good reminder that the global
boom will not necessarily be knuckled under by subprime woes. There are
still a lot of dollars sloshing around -- trillions of them in Sovereign
Wealth Funds and global central bank coffers -- and a lot of building to
do. Steel makers are benefiting from a long-term trend of consolidation
(scooping up previously fragmented producers) and dampened volatility as
global growth prospects, and construction projects, take hold on a
broader scale.

AH, SOYBEANS. There
are few things a grizzled commodity broker loves more than a raging bull
market in grains. (Not that your humble editor, an ex-commodity broker
himself, is all that particularly grizzled.)

"Beans in the teens!" is the
old, if seldom heard, rallying cry. Perhaps we'll be hearing it again
soon if wheat keeps leading the way.

For all the talk of a perfect storm in
credit markets, the world still seems oblivious to the perfect (and
potentially much bigger) storm brewing for grains: Dramatic increases in
world food demand... alarming drop-offs in potable water supply...
higher potential for drought due to unstable weather patterns... and,
most disturbing of all, the growing trend of food vs. energy
competition. (Every acre of corn planted for ethanol is potentially an
acre of wheat or soybeans foregone.)

Justice Litle is editorial director for Taipan Publishing Group. He is also a regular contributor to Taipan Daily, a free investing and trading e-letter, and editor of Taipan’s Safe Haven Investor. He is the founder and editor of the group’s newest research advisory service, Justice Litle’s Macro Trader.